Operation Shipwreck

Operation Shipwreck was a military operation esecuted by Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) in the Keppel Terminal of Singapore in the Second Cold War, aimed at preventing the launching of Dong-Feng Hypersonic cruise missiles at Iran.

History
A freighter jam packed with Dong-Feng missiles (Mach 7 capable) from the Keppel Terminal in Singapore was to be delivered to Chinese destroyers, coated with carbon nanotubes, rendering them invisible to US satellites. The Strategic Defense Coalition planned to launch the missiles at Iran. Keppel Terminal's primary defense was a single Dong Feng missile, located in the central hub, so a JSOC Strike Force team equipped with HPMs (High Powered Microwave) were to scramble the missile's guidance system. Free electron lasers also guarded the base, so they had to be destroyed, and the freighter would have to be destroyed.

Battle
The JSOC Strike Force roped into the terminal from helicopters that set out from aircraft carrier USS Obama, and moved to secure the area to plant network intruders next to defense modules and the Dong-Feng missile truck. SDC infantry poured in and fighting began, and ASD ground robots were dispatched as well. The Americans defended their devices as they let the SDC machines fry in their own juices, and more US reinforcements arrived by helicopter. The Americans received more machines and men, and after disabling all key SDC points, they launched a missile that destroyed the freighter and all Dong-Feng missiles in the harbor. The surviving Strike Force troops were extracted, and the mission was completed successfully.

Aftermath
Iran was secured for NATO, and the SDC plan to force Iran into their military alliance failed. They also lost lots of money in the destruction of their missiles, and they needed to wait for over a week before making their next move.